"Was there any possibility," asks Jacob Katz in this 1996 Commentary essay, "that the Jews collectively might have been accepted in Europe on their own terms—that is, as a community, with a religion opposed to Christianity?"

Editors' Picks

"My Negro Problem—and Ours" at 50Norman Podhoretz, Commentary. "Ellison was right to excoriate me for my dismissive attitude toward black culture, and my Jewish critics were right to take offense at my questioning whether the survival of the Jewish people was worth the suffering it entailed."

Conspiracy of SilenceTibor Krausz, Jerusalem Report. A new book documents how “Jew” and “Zionist” have become generic insults in Muslim countries—and how Western policymakers deliberately ignore the extent of Islamic anti-Semitism.

Investigating the ShiksaMenachem Kaiser, Los Angeles Review of Books. "Who is the shiksa? Where did she come from? How did she get to where she is today?" And "is calling someone a shiksa really a hate crime?"

Accounting for Anti-ZionismEfraim Karsh, Israel Affairs. The equation of anti-Zionism with anti-Semitism is often dismissed as “Zionist propaganda.” But the claim challenges one of the fundamental tenets of Zionism.